Today’s recipe is from Veganomicon, my featured cookbook of the month. Which, by the way, is really starting to grow on me: Many of the recipes are a little more complicated than what I’m used to, but the recipes and notes are so well written that I feel like I learn something new every time I make one of the meals. (Example: “The basic components of a BBQ sauce are something sweet, something sour, and something tomato-y.”) And the tone of the writing is funny and friendly, without being annoyingly witty or cloying. As if the PPK needs any of my encouragement, nice job, PPK.

Proof that leaf wraps don’t have to suck

I’m always wary of recipes that require wrapping the main event in some sort of leaf — lettuce, cabbage, or otherwise. I guess I associate them with that idiotic low-carb craze where we all shunned tortillas and rolls in favor of animal flesh and heart attacks. And if needless death doesn’t get you, then surely that fact that lettuce leaf wraps always fall apart will.

But not these. Wrapped in collards, these little flavor bundles stay together really well. And what exactly is inside said flavor bundles? Mushrooms, black-eyed peas, chopped collards, and the star of the show — homemade barbecue sauce!

Before you ask: Yes, you could substitute a store-bought barbecue sauce. But what fun would that be? Doing it yourself is far more badass (and the sauce is probably spicier, unless you have the barbecue otaku and have some blazing specialty BBQ in your fridge).

When, in the end, I tested my sauce for flavors, I ended up adding some more vinegar and salt. And in hopes of not killing wife and unborn baby, I started with half the crushed red pepper, and it’s a good thing I did. The sauce was plenty spicy, even for me, and I like spicy stuff. Just a warning.

Alright, enough of my yacking. Here’s the recipe.

(And leave me a comment, because I’d love to know how others like their barbecue sauce. I’ve always been a vinegar-based guy; that’s the stuff my friend and I embarked on that moronic 7-hour hajj to the Outer Banks one night to get. But this recipe has shown me that vinegar and tomato can more-than-peacefully coexist.)

BBQ Black-eyed Pea-Collard Rolls

(reprinted from Veganomicon with permission)

Makes 12 rolls, serves 3 to 4. Time: 40 minutes.

12 large collard leaves

1 tablespoon vegetable oil

8 ounces cremini mushrooms, sliced thickly

4 cups chopped collards

1 (15-ounce) can black-eyed peas, drained and rinsed (1 1/2 cups)

3 cups Backyard BBQ Sauce (below)

Bring a large pot of water to a boil.

When the water is boiling, submerge the collard leaves and cover for 6 minutes. When done, use tongs to transfer them to a strainer and let cool. Handle them gently so that they don’t rip.

Preheat a large skillet over medium heat. Saute the mushrooms in the oil for about 5 minutes, until softened. Add the chopped collards. Cook for 7 to 10 minutes, or until most of the moisture has cooked off. Add the black-eyed peas and cook through. Pour on 2 cups of the BBQ sauce and cook for about 5 more minutes. If it looks watery, turn the heat up a bit and cook a few more minutes.

Let cool just a bit so that you can make the rolls without burning yourself.

Place a collard on a flat work surface with the side that has not been sliced facing you. Place about 2 tablespoons of the black-eyed peas and company in the lower third of the collard. Fold the bottom up over the mixture, then fold in the sides. Roll the collard up, gently but firmly. If the filling is spilling out, remove some of the black-eyed peas and try again.

Continue rolling the remaining collards. When ready to serve, spoon extra BBQ sauce over the rolls.

Backyard BBQ Sauce

Makes about 4 cups. Time: 40 minutes.

1 tablespoon vegetable oil

1 medium-size yellow onion, chopped as finely as you can

4 cloves garlic, minced

1/4 teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon red pepper flakes

1 (28-ounce) can crushed tomatoes

1/3 cup molasses

1/3 cup white vinegar

2 tablespoons sugar

1 tablespoon prepared yellow mustard (Dijon is fine, too)

2 teaspoons liquid smoke

Preheat a saucepan over medium heat. Place the onions in a pan and saute the oil until browned (about 7 minutes). Add the garlic and saute for another minute. Add all the other ingredients except the mustard and liquid smoke, and cook for at least 30 minutes and up to 1 hour, uncovered, stirring occasionally. Lower the heat if the sauce begins to splatter everywhere. Add the mustard and liquid smoke, and taste for sweetness/sourness. Adjust the flavors if you think it’s necessary, and cook for 5 more minutes. If you like a smooth BBQ sauce then puree it, but that’s not entirely necessary.

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Comments

Looks yummy! I’d like to try it with a sub for the mushrooms (I still can’t find one I actually like)- maybe zucchini would be good! The sauce sounds very tasty- I’m usually a sweet sauce fan. In fact one of the “bad foods” I allow in my life on very rare occasion is sweet baby rays bbq. First ingredient- HFCS. I know! But like I said, I only do it every great once in a while (maybe 2x’s per year)
.-= Erica´s last blog ..Fruit Not Fat Blog =-.

Sounds delicious… it’s been a very long time since I’ve had a reason to make homemade BBQ sauce, but now it looks like I have one! I think I may add more mustard though, since I like BBQ sauce where you can taste the mustard. Great pics, too.
.-= Lauren´s last blog ..Stuff in the Mail and Quinoa =-.

A friend of mine came over to my house and cooked these wraps. They were fantastic! I just finished a 12 day cleanse and these were really satisfying. The flavor of the bbq sauce was bold, yet tasty (I love spice, this was perfect). The collard greens worked perfectly. I went on this site to get the recipe. Thanks!

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